[ First of all, apologies for the delayed response; I'm catching up after several days of FOSDEM-plague :-( ]
Hi John, On Mon, Feb 26, 2007 at 04:46:55PM -0600, John Lightsey wrote: >The first power enumerated to the DPL in the Debian Constitution is the >power to appoint and remove delegates. My questions are directed at >determining how you as DPL will use this power to guide the Debian >Project. > >1) Do you believe past DPL's have used the power of delegation >effectively? I think so, yes. Several previous DPLs have shied away from making formal delegations, yet needed work has been done. Maybe that does count as "effectively", I'm not sure. Others *have* officially delegated, and in the main I think those have also been fine. >2) Are there any current delegations you plan to change? Not at this time, no, >3) Are there any developers with positions of authority who should be >given the official sanction of being delegated this authority? None that I can see; if people are already doing a job, then I don't see the point of formalising a delegation. We're a volunteer project, not a company where official job titles may count. >4) Do you believe that ongoing delegations should be limited in time or >indefinite? That should depend on the position in question; I don't see a need to explicitly renew or revoke delegations unless a change is desired. >5) Do you feel it is better to delegate additional developers to an area >of responsibility or to replace delegates when that area is not being >handled effectively. Generally, where possible I'd be happier to grow teams rather than to replace. There's always a fair amount of knowledge and background that should be taken advantage of rather than lost, if nothing else. >5.1) In new areas that cannot be effectively handled by a single >developer, would it be better to delegate the authority to a team or to >delegate the authority to an individual and allow that individual to >form their own team? If it's obvious that a new area is too big for one person, I think it's more sensible to try and recruit a team to work on it to start with, but this depends on the exact case in question. >6) Will you explicitly rescind and redelegate all delegated positions if >you are elected DPL? No, I don't see the need. >7) Will you resign from any delegated positions you currently hold if >you are elected DPL? *Technically* no; AIUI my own delegated 2IC position was only meant to last for AJ's DPL term. In effect, yes - it'd be a little difficult to be both leader and assistant at the same time... :-) >7.1) Do you feel that section 2.1.2, namely "that the Leader cannot >appoint themselves as their own Delegate", should be understood to mean >that the DPL should not hold any delegated positions even when those >delegations were made by a previous DPL? No, not at all. >8) Do you feel that more rapid turnover in delegated positions would be >beneficial or detrimental to the project? Detrimental, IMHO. Experience helps in lots of positions. >9) Is there anything about your approach to delegates which will make >your administration different from those of past DPLs that was not >mentioned? I'd like to see more regular status reports from the delegates, along with any and all teams working in Debian. -- Steve McIntyre, Cambridge, UK. [EMAIL PROTECTED] "We're the technical experts. We were hired so that management could ignore our recommendations and tell us how to do our jobs." -- Mike Andrews
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